Fish Activity

Broome (Town Beach / Gantheaume Point / Roebuck Bay)

Wed 27 May 2026 · Australia/Perth

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Broome (Town Beach / Gantheaume Point / Roebuck Bay)

Wednesday 27 May 2026
Bite Score
57
Low Fish Activity
Summary for 27 May 2026

Bite Compass is showing a low fish activity bite score on 27 May 2026. Wind is around at . Solunar feeding windows are listed below.

Feeding Windows
Best times to fish based on activity score.
Peak
9:30 pm → 11:00 pm
59
1h 30m
Weekly Bite Forecast
Broome (Town Beach / Gantheaume Point / Roebuck Bay) + nearby Perth spots. Thursday 6pm — top windows, conditions, what's biting.
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Local Knowledge

Why locals fish this spot

Broome is the Kimberley town where the entire fishery is shaped by tide. Spring tides run 9–10 metres, the second-largest range in the country, and the water moves so far that Town Beach jetty fishes deep blue at high and dries to mudflat at low. The shore fishery is built around that rhythm — Town Beach jetty into Roebuck Bay, the red rocks at Gantheaume Point, the Willie Creek and Crab Creek mangroves. The big offshore fishery — red emperor, jewfish, mackerel — is mostly a charter proposition out to the Rowley Shoals and the Lacepede Islands.

How to fish this spot

Town Beach jetty: float-rigged garfish or live herring at the top of the tide for queenfish, GTs and the occasional Spanish mackerel as bait stacks against the pylons. Gantheaume Point red rocks: heavy spin or stickbaits at high tide off the ledges for queenfish and trevally — the rocks dry out to a long flat at low tide, so timing is everything. Crab Creek and Willie Creek (mangroves): float-rigged live mullet or paddle tails on the bottom of the run-out for mangrove jack — use the boat or the firmer creek edges, never wade. Roebuck Bay flats by boat: queenfish and trevally on stickbaits at change of tide. Always check the Yawuru Nagulagun marine park zoning and Cable Beach swimming-area exclusions before fishing.

Common catches

Mangrove jack from the creeks, queenfish, GTs and trevally from Town Beach, the rocks and the bay, with Spanish mackerel and emperor a bonus when bait pushes onto the inshore shoals.

Access and tips

Plan every session around the tide chart — Broome tides drive the fishery harder than wind. The 90 minutes either side of the high is the productive window at most shore spots; the bottom of the run-out is when the creek jacks fire. Cable Beach has marked swimming-area exclusions during the May–October patrol season; fish well clear of the flagged zone and the camel-train sections.

Access & Conditions

Getting there

Sealed road in via the Great Northern Highway, around 22 hours from Perth — most people fly to Broome and hire a 4WD. Town has full services including airport, hospital, supermarkets and multiple tackle shops. Town Beach and the jetty have sealed parking. Gantheaume Point is 6km from town on sealed road with a small car park. Willie Creek is 38km north on sealed and unsealed road, 4WD recommended. Crab Creek (Roebuck Bay) is around 17km via Crab Creek Road on unsealed road; check conditions in the wet. Some surrounding country is Yawuru native title land — respect closures and signage.

How it fishes

Spring tides run 9–10 metres and rip current through Roebuck Bay and out past Gantheaume Point at 4–6 knots. Boat fishing demands serious tide planning, and shore fishing demands tide-chart literacy — fishing the wrong stage on the wrong rock is how people get cut off. The dry season (May–October) is the prime trip window with calm seas and consistent easterlies. The wet season (November–April) brings cyclones, irukandji and box jellyfish, and most charter operators stand down. Water clarity drops in the build-up.

Hazards

Saltwater crocodiles are an active hazard at Broome and this is the single most important factor anglers underestimate. Crocs are present in Roebuck Bay, Crab Creek, Willie Creek and the surrounding mangroves, and have been recorded at Cable Beach and Town Beach — the beach is closed when a sighting is confirmed. Do not wade in any tidal water around Broome. Do not clean fish at the water's edge. Sharks work the bay heavily. Irukandji and box jellyfish make November–April water-contact dangerous regardless of crocs. Massive tides cut anglers off from rock platforms — every year.

Gear & Rigs

Town Beach and rocks: 8–10kg spin with 30–50lb leader and 30–60g metals, 5-inch stickbaits or float-rigged gar — bigger than Perth gear because GTs and macks are realistic targets at change of light. Creek jack: 7ft 15–20lb baitcaster or heavy spin with 50lb fluoro and live mullet or paddle tails worked into snags; jacks here pull harder than the Onslow average. Offshore (mostly charter): 24kg overhead and 15–24kg jig gear for emperor, mackerel and reef. Wire trace mandatory for any session targeting macks.

Seasons

Broome sits in the North Coast Bioregion. Demersal mixed bag is 5 per day with emperors capped at 3, no West Coast demersal closure applies. Mangrove jack are 4 per day at Broome — north of the De Grey River — at a 300mm minimum, double the Pilbara limit. Spanish mackerel run September through April. May to October is the prime trip window for both shore and offshore work. The build-up months October and November can fire for pelagics inshore but planning around cyclones gets harder.

If this spot's blown out

Frequently Asked

Are there crocodiles at Broome?

Yes — Broome is well inside saltwater crocodile range and crocs are regularly recorded in Roebuck Bay, Crab Creek, Willie Creek and the surrounding mangroves, and have been confirmed at Cable Beach and Town Beach. Treat all tidal water around Broome as croc habitat. Do not wade, do not clean fish at the water's edge, and follow Shire of Broome and DBCA sighting alerts before any session.

Can I fish Cable Beach?

Yes, outside the patrolled swimming area marked by the red and yellow flags between May and October. Stay well clear of the flagged section, the camel-train operations and any closure issued after a crocodile or shark sighting. The beach is also subject to wet-season closures and stinger warnings November–April.

What are the mangrove jack bag limits at Broome?

Broome is north of the De Grey River, so the daily bag limit is 4 mangrove jack per angler at a 300mm minimum size — double the Pilbara limit south of the river. Jacks here are bigger on average and pull harder. Verify current DPIRD rules before each trip.

Why are the tides such a big deal at Broome?

Spring tides at Broome run 9–10 metres, second-largest in Australia. The water moves vast distances over the bay flats and out past Gantheaume Point, and currents rip at 4–6 knots through the channels. The fishery operates entirely on tide windows: top of the high for the jetty and rocks, bottom of the run-out for the creek jacks. Anglers who arrive without a tide chart and a willingness to plan around it will catch nothing.